Pain Woman Takes Your Keys, and Other Essays from a Nervous System

Author:   Sonya Huber
Publisher:   University of Nebraska Press
ISBN:  

9780803299917


Pages:   204
Publication Date:   01 March 2017
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Our Price $47.39 Quantity:  
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Pain Woman Takes Your Keys, and Other Essays from a Nervous System


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Full Product Details

Author:   Sonya Huber
Publisher:   University of Nebraska Press
Imprint:   University of Nebraska Press
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.263kg
ISBN:  

9780803299917


ISBN 10:   0803299915
Pages:   204
Publication Date:   01 March 2017
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Preface     Acknowledgments     I. Pain Bows in Greeting     What Pain Wants     The Lava Lamp of Pain     Welcome to the Kingdom of the Sick     The Alphabet of Pain     Prayer to Pain     II. Side Projects and Secret Identities     My Alternate Selves with Pain in Silver Lamé Bodysuits     The Cough Drop and the Puzzle of Modernity     From Inside the Egg     Cupcakes     Amoeba Girl     III. My Machines     The Status of Pain     Peering into the Dark of the Self, with Selfie     Augmentation     Interstate and Interbeing     Pain Woman Takes Your Keys     IV. Bitchiness as Treatment Protocol     On Gratitude, and Off     Life Is Good1,2,3     Dear Noted Feminist Scholar     V. Intimate Moments with the Three of Us     A Pain-Sex Anti-Manifesto     The Joy of Not Cooking     Kidney Stone in My Shoe     If Woman Is Five     A Day in the Grammar of Disease     VI. Measuring the Sky     Vital Sign 5     Alternative Pain Scale     In the Grip of the Sky     Between One and Ten Thousand     Inside the Nautilus     Sources      

Reviews

Sonya Huber works magic by articulating the indescribable. With her lyrically written and witty account, she better describes her own pain experience than a patient rating scale of 1 to 10 ever could. -Paula Kamen, author of All in My Head -- Paula Kamen This is an important book, a necessary book, a book that, in the right hands, could change how our medical establishment deals with pain. These essays are at once vulnerable and fierce, funny and smart, unflinching and dappled with stunning metaphor. -Gayle Brandeis, author of Fruitflesh -- Gayle Brandeis Huber has captured what it is to be a woman who lives with chronic pain in all its nuanced complexity. -Sarah Einstein, author of Mot: A Memoir -- Sarah Einstein


Huber has captured what it is to be a woman who lives with chronic pain in all its nuanced complexity. -Sarah Einstein, author of Mot: A Memoir -- Sarah Einstein This is an important book, a necessary book, a book that, in the right hands, could change how our medical establishment deals with pain. These essays are at once vulnerable and fierce, funny and smart, unflinching and dappled with stunning metaphor. -Gayle Brandeis, author of Fruitflesh -- Gayle Brandeis Sonya Huber works magic by articulating the indescribable. With her lyrically written and witty account, she better describes her own pain experience than a patient rating scale of 1 to 10 ever could. -Paula Kamen, author of All in My Head -- Paula Kamen The theorist Elaine Scarry, in her magnum opus The Body in Pain, writes, 'The utter rigidity of pain itself is that its resistance to language is not simply one of its incidental or accidental tributes but is essential to what it is.' One can see Sonya Huber's Pain Woman Takes Your Keys, and Other Essays from a Nervous System as a glorious refusal of what Scarry puts forth. With ardor and valor, Huber renders the lived experience of chronic pain and all that attends it in a language all her own, written-as she so wonderfully phrases it-using 'pain's alphabet.' These essays make imprecision their enemy as they comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable. Pain Woman further establishes Sonya Huber as one of the most exciting voices writing creative nonfiction today. -Vincent Scarpa, Electric Literature -- Vincent Scarpa * Electric Literature * If this isn't the book that we in the pain community need in 2017, I don't know what is. -Matt Mendenhall, Pain-Free Living Magazine -- Matt Mendenhall * Pain-Free Living Magazine *


If this isn't the book that we in the pain community need in 2017, I don't know what is. -Matt Mendenhall, Pain-Free Living Magazine The theorist Elaine Scarry, in her magnum opus The Body in Pain, writes, 'The utter rigidity of pain itself is that its resistance to language is not simply one of its incidental or accidental tributes but is essential to what it is.' One can see Sonya Huber's Pain Woman Takes Your Keys, and Other Essays from a Nervous System as a glorious refusal of what Scarry puts forth. With ardor and valor, Huber renders the lived experience of chronic pain and all that attends it in a language all her own, written-as she so wonderfully phrases it-using 'pain's alphabet.' These essays make imprecision their enemy as they comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable. Pain Woman further establishes Sonya Huber as one of the most exciting voices writing creative nonfiction today. -Vincent Scarpa, Electric Literature Sonya Huber has restored my faith in chronic illness narratives. . . . Now, if I have my way, this book will sneak its way into the lives of many future readers, regardless of their personal experience with chronic illness. -Taylor Wilke, Rumpus Sonya Huber works magic by articulating the indescribable. With her lyrically written and witty account, she better describes her own pain experience than a patient rating scale of 1 to 10 ever could. -Paula Kamen, author of All in My Head This is an important book, a necessary book, a book that, in the right hands, could change how our medical establishment deals with pain. These essays are at once vulnerable and fierce, funny and smart, unflinching and dappled with stunning metaphor. -Gayle Brandeis, author of Fruitflesh Huber has captured what it is to be a woman who lives with chronic pain in all its nuanced complexity. -Sarah Einstein, author of Mot: A Memoir


Sonya Huber works magic by articulating the indescribable. With her lyrically written and witty account, she better describes her own pain experience than a patient rating scale of 1 to 10 ever could. - Paula Kamen, author of All in My Head This is an important book, a necessary book, a book that, in the right hands, could change how our medical establishment deals with pain. These essays are at once vulnerable and fierce, funny and smart, unflinching and dappled with stunning metaphor. - Gayle Brandeis, author of Fruitflesh Huber has captured what it is to be a woman who lives with chronic pain in all its nuanced complexity. - Sarah Einstein, author of Mot: A Memoir


Author Information

Sonya Huber is an associate professor of English at Fairfield University. She is the author of Opa Nobody (Nebraska, 2008), Cover Me: A Health Insurance Memoir (Nebraska, 2010), and The Evolution of Hillary Rodham Clinton. 

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